SET OF FOUR GEORGE III SILVER SERVING DISHES
THOMAS HEMING, LONDON 1773
£2,200
Auction: 28 October 2015 at 10:00 GMT
Description
of waisted rectangular form, engraved armorials, gadroon border and raised on short scroll feet (4)
Width: 26cm weight: 30oz each
Footnote
Note:
The armorials are for King impaling Tredcroft for Peter King, 6th Baron King of Ockham, and his wife Charlotte.
The arms and crests on this and the following ten lots of this silver dinner service are for Peter King (1736-1793), later 6th Baron King of Ockham, and his wife, Charlotte, daughter of Edward Tredcroft of Horsham in Sussex. They were married on the 24th November 1774. As this impressive service is hallmarked for 1773, which means it was marked sometime between May 1773 and May 1774, one can only assume that it was commissioned as a wedding present for the couple.
Peter's father Thomas, 5th Baron King, had married Wilhelmina Catherina, the daughter of John Troye, a judge of the sovereign Council of Brabant, in Delft in 1734. His wife brought with her a large dowry and Thomas became a partner in a Dutch trading house. Peter was born in the Hague, but later educated at Eton and then Trinity College, Cambridge. His political leaning was to the Whigs. In 1787 he voted for the Regency Bill. His son, the 7th Baron, later followed him into the world politics. Peter was buried at the family seat, Ockham at the age of sixty-seven.
Thomas Heming was principal goldsmith to King George III from 1760-1782. Lord Bute, one of Heming's most important patrons, had encouraged his appointment. He produced plate and regalia for the king's coronation, and a significant number of his pieces remain in the Royal Collection.
This dinner service, although comprehensive in size, was larger when originally purchased. There have been a number of pieces sold over the years. For instance, see Christie's Important Silver, 25th November 2008, lot 202, for a pair of tureens (also worth noting the following lot [203], an impressive epergne by Andrew Fogelberg dated 1771, with the arms of his father and mother).
Provenance: Torridon House, Home of The Earls of Lovelace. Click here for further information: http://bit.ly/1MmigxQ